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Mad dogs: The new rabies plague
 
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Mad dogs: The new rabies plague [Paperback]

Don Finley
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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From Library Journal

This account of the latest rabies epidemic in the United States and the battle to halt its spread reads like a fast-paced thriller. Finley, a newspaper medical reporter, describes the canine rabies outbreak that began in Texas in 1988 and the epidemic of raccoon rabies that swept the East Coast from Florida to New York. He also tells the story of the struggle to develop an effective rabies vaccination program in the United States. Such a program has been developed successfully in European nations, but in our country the process has been hampered by politics and side issues. The protagonists in this real-life drama?scientists and public health officials who are often at odds with each other?emerge as strong characters. A gripping and informative book.?Deborah Emerson, Monroe Community Coll. Lib., Rochester, N.Y.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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3.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars A good read for all, May 3 1999
This review is from: Mad dogs: The new rabies plague (Paperback)
The back cover of this book states, "His (i.e., the author's) rare inside look into politics and the science within public bureaucracies will engross those interested in science, public health issues, pet owners and wildlife enthusiasts, and those fascinated by infectious disease threats". This statement is true. Actually it is a 'good read' for anyone and falls into the same ilk (though not necessarily so good) as Watson and Crick's "Double Helix". For those interested in pure entertainment, the book makes good bedtime reading for the general public and scientist alike. In fact, this true story has enough human interest, petty personal politics, good guys and not so good guys, and institutional politics to have the makings of a politics/science soap opera. For those wanting to be informed or educated the book gives a good view as to how public health officials, both competent and incompetent, approach the control of a disease outbreak, whether it be real or potential. It is also instructive in general terms because it illustrates how political influence can interfere with proper public health measures. This should provide the general public with some insight into how disease control processes can be blocked by becoming political footballs (ala AIDS) which is, in itself, a significant contribution to having an informed public. Finally, for those interested in wildlife disease, especially beginning wildlife epidemiologists and managers, there is a concise history of wildlife rabies in North America and the means that have been used to control it. The book could be used as an introduction to wildlife disease courses because it touches or raises indirectly all of the problems that one encounters in the control and study of disease in wildlife, e.g., proper sampling, population estimates, and the effects of home range and animal transport on these, to name a few. However, the efficacy of the book as a source of scientific information would have been enhanced if the passages referring to epidemiological and scientific issues had been more expansive. In some instances, these issues were merely mentioned in passing. However this is not a major deficiency since it was not the intention of the author to produce a textbook. As a reader, the major negative of the book was that there were areas of repetition (intentional or poor editing?) and sometimes the author seemed to use chronology as an organizing principle and at others he used topics. The latter has resulted in some confusion, but perhaps this approach was necessary because of the difficult task of drawing a number of disparate events and personalities together into a common plot theme, not unlike an Inspector Frost, or P. D. James mystery.
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2.0 out of 5 stars USEFUL AND NECESSARY INFORMATION, BUT FULL OF ERRORS, Feb 4 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Mad dogs: The new rabies plague (Paperback)
CHAPTER EIGHT "Face on a Plague" starts of with an inaccurate statement, and it was very disappointing!!!!!!
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Amazon.com: 3.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)

9 of 9 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars A good read for all, May 3 1999
By Bill Latshaw , Western College of Vet .Med. (... - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Mad dogs: The new rabies plague (Paperback)
The back cover of this book states, "His (i.e., the author's) rare inside look into politics and the science within public bureaucracies will engross those interested in science, public health issues, pet owners and wildlife enthusiasts, and those fascinated by infectious disease threats". This statement is true. Actually it is a 'good read' for anyone and falls into the same ilk (though not necessarily so good) as Watson and Crick's "Double Helix". For those interested in pure entertainment, the book makes good bedtime reading for the general public and scientist alike. In fact, this true story has enough human interest, petty personal politics, good guys and not so good guys, and institutional politics to have the makings of a politics/science soap opera. For those wanting to be informed or educated the book gives a good view as to how public health officials, both competent and incompetent, approach the control of a disease outbreak, whether it be real or potential. It is also instructive in general terms because it illustrates how political influence can interfere with proper public health measures. This should provide the general public with some insight into how disease control processes can be blocked by becoming political footballs (ala AIDS) which is, in itself, a significant contribution to having an informed public. Finally, for those interested in wildlife disease, especially beginning wildlife epidemiologists and managers, there is a concise history of wildlife rabies in North America and the means that have been used to control it. The book could be used as an introduction to wildlife disease courses because it touches or raises indirectly all of the problems that one encounters in the control and study of disease in wildlife, e.g., proper sampling, population estimates, and the effects of home range and animal transport on these, to name a few. However, the efficacy of the book as a source of scientific information would have been enhanced if the passages referring to epidemiological and scientific issues had been more expansive. In some instances, these issues were merely mentioned in passing. However this is not a major deficiency since it was not the intention of the author to produce a textbook. As a reader, the major negative of the book was that there were areas of repetition (intentional or poor editing?) and sometimes the author seemed to use chronology as an organizing principle and at others he used topics. The latter has resulted in some confusion, but perhaps this approach was necessary because of the difficult task of drawing a number of disparate events and personalities together into a common plot theme, not unlike an Inspector Frost, or P. D. James mystery.

0 of 6 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars USEFUL AND NECESSARY INFORMATION, BUT FULL OF ERRORS, Feb 3 1999
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Mad dogs: The new rabies plague (Paperback)
CHAPTER EIGHT "Face on a Plague" starts of with an inaccurate statement, and it was very disappointing!!!!!!
 Go to Amazon.com to see both reviews  3.0 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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